Dolly Villegas1, Connie Alejandra Echandía-Villegas2, Carlos Armando Echandía3. 1. Hospital Universitario del Valle, Cali, Colombia. E-mail: dvillegas@huv.gov.co. 2. Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, CaliColombia E mail: conicita5@hotmail.com. 3. Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, Faculty of Health, Universidad del Valle, Cali. Email: carlos.echandia@correounivalle.edu.co.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Afebrile pneumonia syndrome in infants, also called infant pneumonitis, pneumonia caused by atypical pathogens or whooping cough syndrome is a major cause of severe lower respiratory infection in young infants, both in developing countries and in developed countries. OBJECTIVE: To describe children with afebrile pneumonia syndrome. METHODS: Through a cross-sectional study, we reviewed the medical records of children diagnosed with afebrile pneumonia treated at Hospital Universitario del Valle, a reference center in southwestern Colombia, between June 2001 and December 2007. We obtained data on maternal age and origin, prenatal care, the childs birth, breastfeeding, vaccination status, symptoms, signs, diagnosis, treatment, and complications. RESULTS: We evaluated 101 children with this entity, noting a stationary presentation: June-August and November- December. A total of 73% of the children were under 4 months of age; the most common symptoms were: cyanotic and spasmodic cough (100%), respiratory distress (70%), and unquantified fever (68%). The most common findings: rales (crackles) (50%), wheezing and expiratory stridor (37%); 66% were classified as mild and of the remaining 33%, half of them required attention in the intensive care unit. In all, there was clinical diagnosis of afebrile pneumonia syndrome in infants, but no etiologic diagnosis was made and despite this, 94% of the children received macrolides. CONCLUSIONS: These data support the hypothesis that most of these patients acquired the disease by airway, possibly caused by viral infection and did not require the indiscriminate use of macrolides.
INTRODUCTION:Afebrile pneumonia syndrome in infants, also called infantpneumonitis, pneumonia caused by atypical pathogens or whooping cough syndrome is a major cause of severe lower respiratory infection in young infants, both in developing countries and in developed countries. OBJECTIVE: To describe children with afebrile pneumonia syndrome. METHODS: Through a cross-sectional study, we reviewed the medical records of children diagnosed with afebrile pneumonia treated at Hospital Universitario del Valle, a reference center in southwestern Colombia, between June 2001 and December 2007. We obtained data on maternal age and origin, prenatal care, the childs birth, breastfeeding, vaccination status, symptoms, signs, diagnosis, treatment, and complications. RESULTS: We evaluated 101 children with this entity, noting a stationary presentation: June-August and November- December. A total of 73% of the children were under 4 months of age; the most common symptoms were: cyanotic and spasmodic cough (100%), respiratory distress (70%), and unquantified fever (68%). The most common findings: rales (crackles) (50%), wheezing and expiratory stridor (37%); 66% were classified as mild and of the remaining 33%, half of them required attention in the intensive care unit. In all, there was clinical diagnosis of afebrile pneumonia syndrome in infants, but no etiologic diagnosis was made and despite this, 94% of the children received macrolides. CONCLUSIONS: These data support the hypothesis that most of these patients acquired the disease by airway, possibly caused by viral infection and did not require the indiscriminate use of macrolides.
Authors: Rubén Solano; Josefa Masa-Calles; Zacarías Garib; Patricia Grullón; Sandy L Santiago; Altagracia Brache; Ángela Domínguez; Joan A Caylà Journal: BMC Public Health Date: 2016-11-22 Impact factor: 3.295
Authors: Juana Del Valle-Mendoza; Cristina Del Valle-Vargas; Ronald Aquino-Ortega; Luis J Del Valle; Erico Cieza-Mora; Wilmer Silva-Caso; Jorge Bazán-Mayra; Victor Zavaleta-Gavidia; Miguel Angel Aguilar-Luis; Hernán Cornejo-Pacherres; Johanna Martins-Luna; Angela Cornejo-Tapia Journal: Iran J Microbiol Date: 2021-02
Authors: Juana Del Valle-Mendoza; Wilmer Silva-Caso; Miguel Angel Aguilar-Luis; Cristina Del Valle-Vargas; Erico Cieza-Mora; Johanna Martins-Luna; Ronald Aquino-Ortega; Andrea Silva-Vásquez; Jorge Bazán-Mayra; Pablo Weilg Journal: BMC Res Notes Date: 2018-05-18